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A Senate Republican warned Thursday that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s primary focus is shedding American blood as U.S.-Iran relations continue to simmer. 

‘The Ayatollah not only thinks that I’m going to hell because I don’t agree with his religion — he wants to kill me,’ Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said on the Senate floor Thursday.

‘He wants to kill Americans and the Israelis and anybody who does not believe in his jihad and drink our blood out of a boot,’ Kennedy continued. ‘And he’s acted on that, and that’s not acceptable.’

Kennedy’s message comes as tensions with Iran are escalating. At the core of the issue is Iran’s capability and Khamenei’s desire to build a nuclear weapon.

President Donald Trump gave the country’s leadership roughly 10 to 15 days to reach a nuclear agreement and warned that the inability to strike a deal could lead to U.S. military action in the region.

He renewed that edict during his State of the Union address earlier this week.

‘I will never allow the world’s number one sponsor of terror … to have a nuclear weapon,’ Trump said.

Kennedy cautioned that if the Trump administration were to broker a deal, it would need to have guardrails.

‘If we make a deal with Iran, let’s make sure we have a protocol to enforce it, because in my experience in watching the Ayatollah through the years, I wouldn’t trust this man if he was three days dead,’ he said.

Meanwhile, lawmakers are wrestling with the exact nature of what a strike could look like and whether Congress should weigh in before Trump makes a decision.

Sens. Tim Kaine, D-Va., and Rand Paul, R-Ky., expect that their Iran war powers resolution will hit the Senate floor next week, which would curb Trump’s ability to strike the country without Congress’ approval.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said that the most important aspect of the Iran negotiations was ‘to prevent them from having nuclear capability.’

‘But there are also other threats that they represent in the region, and we have a big presence in that region, as you know, so I think they’re looking at and working through what the options might be,’ Thune said. ‘In my view, if you’re going to do something there, you better well make it about getting new leadership and regime change.’

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Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton wasted no time criticizing Republicans after she emerged from a roughly six-hour grilling in the House Oversight Committee’s Jeffrey Epstein probe Thursday evening.

Clinton told reporters she answered questions ‘repetitively, literally over and over again’ after blasting Republicans for holding a closed-door deposition instead of a public hearing.

She said, however, that she would not testify again if there was a public hearing, telling reporters, ‘They had a chance to do it in public, and I wish they had done it in public. And I think they’re making the wrong decision, avoiding doing it in public.

‘It then got, at the end, quite unusual because I started being asked about UFOs and a series of questions about Pizzagate, one of the most vile, bogus conspiracy theories that was propagated on the internet that was serving as the basis of a member’s questions to me,’ Clinton said.

She also knocked Republican lawmakers for not attending the deposition of former Victoria’s Secret CEO Leslie Wexner in person.

Clinton did save praise for House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., however, ‘for raising a series of significant questions that I responded to about the nature of the investigation and the areas that I thought should be explored.’

‘So, I appreciated that. I want to see the truth come out. So, that was a reassuring way to end a very long, repetitive, deposition,’ Clinton said.

She also reiterated comments from her opening statement that she did not know Epstein and said she only knew Ghislaine Maxwell ‘as an acquaintance.’

When asked why Maxwell was invited to daughter Chelsea Clinton’s wedding, however, Clinton said she was a ‘plus-one of someone invited.’

Clinton’s deposition began in the 11 a.m. hour and wrapped in the 5 p.m. hour in her hometown of Chappaqua, New York.

Comer said afterward that Clinton ‘answered most of our questions’ in a ‘productive’ deposition but said Republicans ultimately ‘weren’t satisfied’ with what they gleaned.

‘The number of times that she said, ‘I don’t know, you’ll have to ask my husband,’ was more than a dozen,’ Comer said.

Former President Bill Clinton is slated to testify behind closed doors Friday for what Comer said would be an ‘even longer’ deposition.

Neither Clinton is implicated in any wrongdoing related to Epstein or Maxwell, but Bill Clinton was known to have a relationship with the late financier and sex trafficker before the federal investigations into Epstein’s crimes came to light.

Hillary Clinton said that relationship ‘ended years, several years, before anything about Epstein’s criminal activities came to light.’

Rep. William Timmons, R-S.C., told Fox News Digital it was ‘frustrating’ to see Hillary Clinton ‘obstinate and sort of annoyed at the process.’

‘She had an excuse for everything. But when you’ve got a pattern of involvement and a pattern of association, the American people deserve answers,’ Timmons said.

‘Honestly, I tend to find her to be fairly credible, but I mean, all of this is going to culminate tomorrow with President Clinton, and he has a lot of really hard questions to answer. And I don’t think that the American people are going to like his answers.’

The deposition was tense at times, a tension Clinton alluded to when she accused Republicans of breaking the rules when Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., apparently shared a photo from inside the deposition room with a right-wing influencer.

‘We had a bit of a challenge in the beginning because we agreed upon rules based on the fact it was going to be a closed hearing at their demand. And one of the members violated that rule, which was very upsetting because it suggested that they might violate other of our agreements,’ Clinton said. 

‘So, we had to cease the hearing for a period of time until we could get assurances that no rules would be broken going forward.’

It’s notable, however, that Democrats also leaked information from inside the room but did not get any public blowback. A New York Times reporter posted reporting about the deposition on X earlier in the day while citing a ‘Dem member in the room.’

Bill Clinton’s deposition is also expected to kick off in the 11 a.m. hour on Friday at the Chappaqua Performing Arts Center.

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Denmark will head to the polls March 24 after Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen called a snap parliamentary election, a move widely viewed as an attempt to consolidate rising public support tied to her handling of tensions with President Donald Trump over Greenland.

Frederiksen announced the early vote Wednesday, arguing Denmark needs political clarity at a time of mounting geopolitical pressure. According to Reuters, she said the country faces ‘a serious foreign policy situation,’ adding voters should have a say in how Denmark navigates it.

Her center-left Social Democratic government has seen a lift in opinion polls in recent weeks after taking a firm stance that Greenland is not for sale and that Danish sovereignty is non-negotiable. 

The dispute with Washington has reshaped the domestic political conversation, pushing Arctic security and national sovereignty to the forefront of Danish politics.

Frederiksen, who has led Denmark since mid-2019, has spent much of the past year managing the fallout from Trump’s renewed push to acquire Greenland, the vast Arctic island that is an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark. Tensions escalated sharply last month when Trump threatened to impose new tariffs on Denmark and several other European Union countries.

Trump has argued that the United States needs control of the North Atlantic island for national security reasons, citing increased activity by Russia and China in the Arctic. The region has grown in strategic importance as melting ice opens shipping routes and access to natural resources, intensifying competition among major powers.

The standoff appeared to ease after Trump announced that a framework agreement to strengthen Arctic security had been reached in talks with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos. After that announcement, U.S., Danish and Greenlandic officials began technical discussions on implementing the arrangement, focusing on security coordination rather than any change in sovereignty.

Throughout the crisis, Frederiksen and other senior Danish officials repeatedly emphasized that Greenland’s status is not up for negotiation. Speaking at the Munich Security Conference earlier in February, Frederiksen cautioned that she did not believe the crisis had fully passed and suggested Washington could still harbor ambitions to annex the island.

According to The Guardian, Danish commentators have described the prime minister’s polling boost as a ‘Greenland bounce,’ reflecting growing domestic approval of her firm posture toward Washington.

Frederiksen’s decision to call early elections appears aimed at converting that surge into a renewed mandate. Denmark’s next general election had not been scheduled until later this year, but the prime minister argued that the current security climate justifies seeking fresh voter backing.

Greenland, home to roughly 56,000 people, has long been strategically significant due to its location between North America and Europe. The United States maintains a military presence there at Pituffik Space Base, formerly known as Thule Air Base. Any suggestion of U.S. acquisition has historically been sensitive in both Copenhagen and Nuuk, Greenland’s capital.

Euronews reported that Frederiksen’s government has stressed cooperation with allies while firmly rejecting any negotiations over Greenland’s sovereignty. European leaders have signaled support for Denmark, reinforcing the view that Arctic stability is increasingly central to NATO and EU planning.

Opposition parties have criticized the timing of the snap election, arguing that Frederiksen is seeking a political advantage during a moment of heightened nationalism. Others, however, have largely backed the government’s line on Greenland, suggesting that the sovereignty issue may transcend traditional party divides.

The March 24 vote will determine whether Frederiksen can strengthen her coalition or voters shift the parliamentary balance. It will also serve as a broader test of how Danes believe their country should manage its relationship with Washington as Arctic security becomes a defining issue of global competition.

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Glen Kuiper, the former Oakland A’s TV broadcaster who was fired after he used a racial slur on air while discussing his visit to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, will be returning to the airwaves, calling the radio play-by-play for the San Francisco Giants’ exhibition game against Team USA next week.

The San Francisco Chronicle first reported Kuiper’s move across the bay, as well as the fact that Kuiper will fill in on about a dozen games after the team held “definite conversations” about the veteran broadcaster.

“The Giants are committed to inclusion, respect and earning our fans’ trust,” Rachel Heit, the Giants’ chief marketing officer, told the Chronicle. “We had numerous conversations about the requirements for excellence we expect from our broadcasters. Glen’s addition to the broadcast team is reflective of how he’s approached his growth and what he’s demonstrated from an accountability perspective.”

It’s been nearly three years since Kuipe‘s voice appeared during an MLB game, but the San Francisco Giants’ leadership believes he’s taken ‘full responsibility,’ according to Heit.

The moment occurred during his 17th season as the A’s play-by-play announcer, on May 5, 2023, when he is heard saying, ‘we had a phenomenal day today at (N-word) museum and Arthur Bryant’s Barbecue,’ before a game between the A’s and Royals. 

Kuiper later apologized for what he had said during the game’s sixth inning.

‘A little bit earlier in the show, I said something that didn’t come out quite the way I wanted it to, and I just wanted to apologize if it sounded different than I meant it,’ Kuiper said.

‘Following an internal review, the decision has been made for NBC Sports California to end its relationship with Glen Kuiper, effective immediately,” the network said in a statement released on May 22, 2023. “We thank Glen for his dedication to Bay Area baseball over the years.”

USA TODAY reporter Lindsay Schnell contributed to this article.

Noe Padilla is a Northern California Reporter for USA Today. Contact him at npadilla@usatodayco.com, follow him on X @1NoePadilla or on Bluesky @noepadilla.bsky.social. Sign up for the TODAY Californian newsletter or follow us on Facebook at TODAY Californian.

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March Madness is quickly approaching, with the men’s college basketball regular season coming to a close in the coming weeks. A few teams are starting to pull ahead as national championship favorites.

Eight of the last nine national champions have been No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament, with the lone exception being UConn in 2023, as the Huskies were a No. 4 seed. Of course, UConn repeated as national champions in 2024. Coincidentally enough, the last team lower than a No. 4 seed to win a title was also UConn, when it won as a No. 7 seed in 2014.

That said, math favors the NCAA tournament champion being a team that dominated the regular season, which makes plenty of sense.

Here’s a look at USA TODAY Sports predictions for which teams can win a national championship this season:

March Madness predictions 2026: Who can win a national championship?

Michigan

It only took Dusty May two seasons as head coach to turn Michigan into a national championship contender, as the Wolverines are 26-2 this season with wins over Gonzaga, Purdue and Michigan State, which all also appear on this list.

Michigan is the only team in the country ranked inside the top five of both KenPom’s offensive and defensive adjusted efficiency, ranking No. 5 and No. 2 in the metrics, respectively. UAB transfer Yaxel Lendeborg is one of the best all-around players in the country, averaging 14.2 points with 7.2 rebounds and 3.3 assists per game on 49.6% shooting.

Michigan belongs at the top, or at least very close to it, among the national championship favorites this season.

Duke

Duke has been the best defensive team in the country this season per KenPom, and also has one of, if not the frontrunner for national player of the year in Cameron Boozer.

Boozer, who’s averaging 22.7 points with 10.7 rebounds and four assists per game on 58.3% shooting this season, has had a Cooper Flagg-like impact on the Blue Devils. The surefire top-five pick in the upcoming 2026 NBA Draft was tremendous in Duke’s win over Michigan on Feb. 21, scoring 18 points with 10 rebounds, seven assists and two blocks in the win.

Duke isn’t quite as loaded as it was last season with top-three NBA picks Flagg and Kon Knueppel, but the Blue Devils are more than capable of winning a title.

Arizona

Fifth-year coach Tommy Lloyd, a former Mark Few assistant at Gonzaga, has reloaded Arizona this season after the Wildcats lost four starters from 2025’s Sweet 16 team.

Arizona is young, with three true freshmen starters. The Wildcats are led by Brayden Burries and Koa Peat, who are averaging 15.5 and 13.8 points per game this season. Fellow true freshman Ivan Kharchenkov is also averaging 10.1 points this season.

Arizona ranks eighth in KenPom’s adjusted offensive efficiency and third in adjusted defensive efficiency while playing in the Big 12, likely the best conference in college basketball this season. It has three wins over top-10 ranked teams – Florida, UConn and Houston – and looks like one of the best Final Four bets in 2026.

Florida

Reigning national champion Florida lost its three starting guards from last season’s team – March Madness hero Walter Clayton Jr., Alijah Martin and Will Richard. However, the Gators’ frontcourt trio of Thomas Haugh, Alex Condon and Rueben Chinyelu all returned, and form perhaps the best group of big men in the country.

Haugh, Condon and Chinyelu are averaging 17.3, 14 and 11.5 points per game this season, respectively. They’re also averaging a combined 26 rebounds per game, and Chinyelu leads all players nationally with 11.6 boards per contest.

The guard play has been suspect at times this season, but the Gators are rolling as of late with a 12-2 record in conference play. Florida could go as far as starting guards Boogie Fland and Xaivian Lee take them, or its frontcourt could continue dominating and make their shaky play not even matter.

Houston

Houston is amid a 3-game losing streak, a rarity under legendary coach Kelvin Sampson, one of the best to never win a national title. The Cougars are coming off a national championship runner-up finish in 2025.

Houston boasts one of the most dynamic guards nationally in true freshman Kingston Flemings, who paces the offense with 16.6 points and 5.1 assists per game. Flemings, paired with returning starters Milos Uzan, Emanuel Sharp and Joseph Tugler, makes for a lineup with loads of experience.

The Cougars rank 15th in adjusted offensive efficiency and eighth in adjusted defensive efficiency, which is still elite but worse than their usual standards. Houston is still one of the strongest bets to reach the Final Four, which it has done twice since 2020.

Illinois

Illinois has scored better than anyone in college basketball this season, with all five starters averaging in double digits while ranking No. 1 in adjusted offensive efficiency. True freshman Keaton Wagler has been a great surprise for the Fighting Illini, raising their ceiling by averaging 18.2 points with 5 rebounds and 4.3 assists per game while shooting 42% from 3-point range.

Illinois’ defense is the worst among KenPom’s top-15 ranked teams, which could pose a threat come NCAA tournament time. Still, their transfer-heavy lineup could have enough firepower to make a run to a national title.

Purdue

The preseason No. 1-ranked team hasn’t been quite as good as expected, but is still a top national championship contender.

Purdue’s backcourt of Braden Smith and Fletcher Loyer have likely more experience than anyone in college basketball, as the four-year starters have been together since 2022-23. Smith, one of the best playmakers in the sport, is averaging 8.7 assists per game and paces an offense that ranks second nationally per KenPom.

Trey Kaufman-Renn, who led the team averaging 20.1 points per game last season, has taken a step back in 2025-26 averaging 13.3 points per contest. His emergence in March could be an X-Factor for the Boilermakers, and he could be heating up, with 27 and 20 points in his last two outings.

Michigan State

Never count out Tom Izzo in March Madness. The legendary coach hasn’t won a national title since 2000, but has six Final Four appearance since and has an experienced roster in 2026.

Multi-year starters Jeremy Fears Jr. (15 points and 9.2 assists per game) and Jaxon Kohler (12.3 points and 9.3 rebounds per game) lead the way for the Spartans. Returning contributors Coen Carr and Carson Cooper have emerged as starters in 2026 and both average in the double figures.

The Spartans lack a go-to scorer and could win a title if their offense gets hot.

Iowa State

Iowa State has been one of the Big 12’s top programs for a few years now, but doesn’t have much NCAA tournament success to show for it, with only a pair of Sweet 16 appearances since T.J. Otzelberger took over in 2021.

The Cyclones were bounced in the Round of 32 last season, despite having a veteran roster. They also have an experienced group this season, and are looking to avoid that same fate this season.

Iowa State is led by a trio of multi-year starters in Milan Momcilovic, Joshua Jefferson and Tamin Lipsey, who are averaging 17.4, 16.6 and 13 points per game this season, respectively. The Cyclones can shoot and defend, which is a recipe for success in March.

Kansas

Kansas has been solid without star freshman Darryn Peterson this season, even taking down Arizona without the projected No. 1 overall pick. Still, the Jayhawks’ ceiling is highest when Peterson is at his best.

Peterson is averaging 19.5 points per game this season while shooting 40.5% from 3-point range but has missed 11 games. If he can stay on the court, the Jayhawks are a true national title threat.

UConn

UConn is back to college basketball elite status this season after being a bubble team in 2025. The Huskies have won two national titles under Dan Hurley, and he has another squad capable of winning a championship in 2026.

UConn has three returning starters in Solo Ball, Tarris Reed Jr. and Alex Karaban, a four-year starter for the Huskies. UConn added true freshman Braylon Mullins and Georgia transfer Silas Demary Jr. to its backcourt, with both additions providing a huge boost to last season’s core.

The Huskies haven’t been tested much in Big East play, but have nonconference wins over Illinois and Florida. They rank No. 12 in KenPom’s overall adjusted efficiency ratings.

Gonzaga

Gonzaga has one win this season over a currently ranked team (Alabama), and has dominated WCC play, per usual, which makes it hard to know just how good the Bulldogs are opposed to other seasons.

Gonzaga’s frontcourt duo of Graham Ike and Braden Huff is stellar, as the duo is averaging 19.9 and 17.8 points per game this season, respectively. Outside shooting could be a problem in March Madness, though.

Arkansas

Arkansas surprised many last season when it reached the Sweet 16 despite being a bubble team for most of the season under John Calipari. The Razorbacks likely won’t be a top-three seed in the NCAA tournament, but maybe is a sleeper national title team.

True freshman guard Darius Acuff Jr. is one of the best players in the country, averaging 22.2 points with 6.2 assists per game this season, and scored 49 points in an overtime loss to Alabama on Feb. 18.

Arkansas ranks fourth nationally in adjusted offensive efficiency and is capable of getting hot and making a run.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Miami defensive end Rueben Bain Jr. is a projected top-10 NFL draft pick, but his arm length has become a debated topic.
  • Bain’s arms were measured at 30 ⅞ inches, well below the 33-inch threshold many NFL teams prefer for defensive ends.
  • The debate over arm length was recently highlighted by criticism of Patriots offensive tackle Will Campbell, though many analysts defended his performance.

INDIANAPOLIS – Rueben Bain Jr. knew this was coming.

Since he was a highly sought-after defensive end recruit, Bain envisioned establishing himself becoming a program-altering presence for his hometown Miami Hurricanes. From there, he would vault into the conversation as a top NFL draft pick.

The vision for his three-year college career has been fulfilled. The Atlantic Coast Conference Defensive Player of the Year propelled Miami all the way to its first national title game appearance in 23 years. And as he attends the NFL scouting combine this week as an expected top-10 pick in the 2026 NFL draft, the latter half of that plan could be coming to fruition.

‘I’m kind of looking back on it like, ‘Damn, this is actually here. This is actually real,” Bain said Feb. 25.

What Bain didn’t foresee was a hot-button issue being made out of a physical shortcoming: his arm length.

Now, the consensus All-American has become the latest highly ranked lineman to restoke a divisive draft debate.

‘I didn’t hear it until later in the year, but it kind of surprised me because I never heard it all my life,’ Bain said about talk of his arm length being a concern, noting that the topic hasn’t been broached in any of his meetings at the combine. ‘I don’t give it the time of day, honestly.’

But several NFL teams evaluating him might after Bain’s arm length was measured at 30 ⅞ inches at the combine on Feb. 26. That figure comes in significantly below the widely held standard of 33 inches for edge rushers, with just three players since 2010 having shorter arms.

And he’s not alone in being a special case that will challenge teams’ scouting departments this year. Texas A&M edge rusher Cashius Howell, the reigning Southeastern Conference Player of the Year, logged in at just 30 ¼, the shortest figure since at least 2010.

The scrutiny surrounding Bain has swelled just weeks after a Super Bowl matchup that stirred a wider discourse on the matter. New England Patriots left tackle Will Campbell’s pervasive struggles to protect Drake Maye had many fans pointing to the attribute he became known for throughout the pre-draft process: 32 -inch arms, a mark seldom seen by top-10 picks at the position. But a flood of former offensive linemen – including Hall of Famer Joe Thomas, an outspoken critic of the measurement – came to Campbell’s defense and fought the narrative, arguing that his lapses against the Seattle Seahawks’ pass rush were unrelated to his full extension.

Yet for NFL teams weighing a hefty investment at a premium position, does arm length amount to a sticking point rather than merely a talking point?

‘With some guys, it is,’ Miami Dolphins coach Jeff Hafley said. ‘Some guys with short arms, they kind of get eaten up, but some guys are so quick where they can get their hands inside first and still disengage. So in an ideal world, would you love to have a guy with long arms? Yeah, absolutely. But I think there’s other guys that have shorter arms that are really good edge rushers or really good inside.’

To some in the trenches, however, arm length has become the big-man equivalent of the 40-yard dash: a much-hyped metric that seldom captures the reality of their roles.

‘If you take a big risk on a guy like a Rueben Bain or a Will Campbell and it doesn’t work out, it could come back and bite you,’ former NFL offensive lineman Justin Pugh, a former first-round pick who began his 11-year NFL career at right tackle despite having 32-inch arms, told USA TODAY Sports. ‘And if arm length was a factor and a red flag, then all of the sudden, the GM is bad. The scouts are bad. People get fired.

‘That’s why I think measurables become so big – because people cover their (backs). People will say, ‘Well, (the player) hit all the requirements.’ Can they play football? Like, Rueben Bain can play football.’

Where do NFL teams draw the line on arm length?

For Washington Commanders general manager Adam Peters, the arm length riddle begins with simply getting a precise measurement.

‘Every time you measure somebody’s arm, it could be 30, 31, 32, 33 (inches), just depending on who measures it,’ Peters said. 

Ideally, Peters said, a team in need of an edge rusher would want to find Myles Garrett, the long-limbed former No. 1 overall pick who this season set the NFL sack record and earned his second Defensive Player of the Year award. But ‘there’s only one of those guys walking on the face of the earth,’ so a balancing act ensues in which teams consider how far they’re willing to wander from their desired attributes.

Peters, whose team figures to be a prime candidate to take either Bain or another top edge rusher, is one decision-maker looking for equilibrium there.

‘In terms of guys with shorter arms, there’s a few in this draft that are really, really good players,’ Peters said.

Several success stories of arm-length outliers have popped up in recent years. Trey Hendrickson of the Cincinnati Bengals, who measured in with 32-inch arms, has held at least a share of the league lead in sacks in two of the last three years. The Green Bay Packers’ Micah Parsons, a converted linebacker, didn’t let 31 ½-inch arms stop him from becoming the first player to record at least 12 sacks in each of his first five seasons.

But even with front offices across the league split in their willingness to break from norms, the NFL world at large has made its preferences clear through the draft.

In the last 20 years, no player at or below Bain’s measurement has been selected in the first round or had a season with double-digit sacks. And of the players who finished top 10 in the NFL in sacks last season, all had recorded arm lengths of at least 32 inches.

Bain, then, might be the ultimate test case for evaluators on their willingness to budge.

‘Rueben Bain is an identity pick who plays so hard and so physical,’ NFL Network draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah said in a conference call last week. ‘The dimensions aren’t gonna be ideal in terms of the length, but there’s more that he brings than just what shows up on the stat sheet – just the overall physicality and toughness that he plays with.’

For many NFL decision-makers, reconciling on-field performance with a substandard frame entails figuring out how the two actually intertwine on the field. That should mean not focusing on the arm length figure unless problems arise in reviewing a prospect’s play, Jeremiah said.

‘If you didn’t know their arm length and you watched four games on a guy, and you never thought there was an issue with guys getting to his chest or him playing short-armed, then I wouldn’t be as concerned about it,’ Jeremiah said. ‘But when you have issues of guys getting edged, or you have defensive linemen who can’t get to the body of anybody, then it’s like, ‘OK, I’ve got some concerns. By the way, what’s his arm length?”

Will Campbell arm length criticism and backlash

When the Patriots selected Campbell No. 4 overall last year and installed him as the starting left tackle, it seemed to end one of the larger consternations of the 2025 draft cycle. The LSU product enjoyed a largely successful rookie campaign, helping the Patriots engineer a record-tying 10-win improvement from the previous season.

But when Campbell returned in Week 18 from a knee injury that sidelined him for four games, trouble followed. The rookie suffered what Patriots personnel chief Eliot Wolf said were three of his four worst games of the entire season in the playoff spotlight, with Maye taking 21 sacks in the postseason – including six in the Super Bowl loss to the Seahawks.

As critiques mounted, so too did references to Campbell’s arm length. Wolf, however, mirrored many former NFL offensive linemen in instead pointing to Campbell’s lower body, which he said did not appear to have the same strength upon the blocker’s return from injury.

Coach Mike Vrabel made clear two days after the Super Bowl that the Patriots were ‘not moving Will to guard or center or to tight end or anywhere else.’

‘Everyone talks about the arm length, but he has a set of skills that enable him to play with that arm length,’ Wolf said of Campbell. ‘He’s really quick out of his stance. He’s technically sound. He’s adding more and more different pass sets to his tool bag that he can use to combat different rushes. And again, he’s 22 years old, and we expect some improvement out of him as well.’

Pugh made the transition from right tackle to left guard after his first two pro seasons, but not due to issues posed by his limited reach. A two-time first-team All-Big East left tackle at Syracuse, he regularly sparred with future four-time Pro Bowl edge rusher Chandler Jones – whose arms measured more than three inches longer than Pugh’s – and still held his own.

More bothersome for Pugh was having to switch sides to the right side to start off his career. Going back to work on the left as a guard allowed him to rediscover his comfort zone, as well as the opportunity to engage rangier defensive linemen more quickly.

As a pro, Pugh never heard his arm length cited in film reviews the same way other facets, such as footwork and punch timing, would surface. Instead, the mission was to be solution-oriented.

‘If someone is long-arming and I can’t get them with my short arms, then I just chop their arm down,’ Pugh said. ‘Get his arm off you. You wouldn’t say, ‘Your arms are too short – tough luck, tell God to help you out next time.’ If you don’t block the guy, you’re not going to have a job.

‘If my arms hurt me so much, why did I play for 11 years? If you can play football, you’ll be on the field.’

Some teams, however, remain on the hunt for premium traits in whatever form they might come. The Cincinnati Bengals, for instance, started two offensive tackles in Amarius Mims and Orlando Brown Jr. who ranked in the 95th and 79th percentile for arm length, respectively.

‘You want guys who play football well, but you want guys who play NFL football well. Those traits are what drive a lot of really great players,’ Bengals director of player personnel Duke Tobin said Feb. 24. ‘We do like guys that are big enough, fast enough, strong enough. You have to have those things. You can’t just have desire. Desire without any physical traits – you’re gonna be doing my job and you’re not going to be playing NFL football for us.’

Bain’s landing spot?

The most telling ruling on Bain’s arm length might be made by the Tennessee Titans, who hold the No. 4 pick in April’s draft.

With new coach Robert Saleh aboard, the Titans are decidedly in the market for a pass rusher to lead the way up front. Both Saleh and general manager Mike Borgonzi spoke of the importance of length across the board on defense. But Saleh also said Bain’s tape was ‘undeniable.’ Bain, meanwhile, boasted that he ‘killed it’ in his interview with Tennessee brass – a claim Borgonzi backed him up on.

‘He’s an unbelievable football player. He plays with great violence. His football IQ is off the charts,” Saleh said. “You trust that a guy like him and his makeup is going to translate the way it needs to. Now, there’s certain things when you talk to him and listen to him, that he will have to adjust to. All these kids will, but I think he’s going to have a lot of success in this league.”

Tennessee could have stylistically different alternatives available at edge rusher, however, in Texas Tech’s David Bailey or Ohio State’s Arvell Reese. How the Titans and other teams navigate the potential selection of Bain could shape the arm length discourse for the next few draft classes.

For now, the goal for teams is not to lose perspective when factoring in the consideration.

‘I’d have a hard time taking a worse player just because he has long arms,’ Jeremiah said.

In other words: Don’t overreach.

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On Tuesday, motorists in Omaha, Nebraska, were stranded at an intersection after a gigantic sinkhole opened up, trapping them in an open cavity in the road.

Moments later, bystanders stepped in to help the drivers and get them to safety. Among the good Samaritans who sprang into action were two Nebraska Omaha Mavericks women’s basketball players.

“I was still in the car, and I saw a man in a hole,” guard Olivia Borsutzki, who approached the scene first, said. “I was like, ‘I need to help.’ Nobody was helping.”

Borsutzki’s teammate, guard Esra Kurban, who arrived moments later, was still trying to process what was happening. “I didn’t even know sinkholes existed,” Kurban said. “I was thinking, is it going to fall more?”

Within several minutes, Borsutzki and Kurban were able to get both drivers out of the sinkhole. The players say one of the drivers was ‘visibly shaken’, and they later offered to let him sit in their car. No injuries were reported in connection with the two-car incident, and surrounding roads were closed off as officials assessed the situation.

The Nebraska Omaha’s assistant athletic director, Jordan Sarnoff, later confirmed the two Omaha players were on site at the sinkhole. In a post on X, Sarnoff also shared footage of the roadway mishap.

‘Two @UNOmaha Mavericks didn’t hesitate,’ Sarnoff said. ‘Proud of @OmahaWBB’s Olivia Borsutzki and Esra Kurban for stepping up in a critical moment Tuesday next to campus.’

Borsutzki and Kurban say they thought other people, including nearby adults, would step in to help the stranded drivers. However, several cars drove past the accident, and others close by had their cell phones out to record.

“We thought grown men were going to stop and help,” Borsutzki and Kurban said. “But no one did. So we left the car.”

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Newly released police bodycam footage shows the aftermath of former WWE CEO Vince McMahon’s July 2025 car crash, which resulted in him being charged with reckless driving.

In the video, which USA TODAY obtained through a public records request, an officer asks McMahon, ‘Why were you driving over 100 miles an hour?’ to which he responds, ‘It’s my granddaughter’s birthday.’

When asked whether he saw the officer’s car with its emergency lights on, McMahon says, ‘I’m not trying to outrun you.’

After declining an ambulance, McMahon says, ‘I haven’t driven this car in quite some time.’ When the officer says, ‘It’s fast, I’ll tell you that,’ McMahon responds, ‘Yeah, too (expletive) fast.’

On July 24, 2025, McMahon was driving on the Merritt Parkway in Westport, Connecticut, when he was involved in a three-car accident that severely damaged his vehicle, according to a police report obtained by USA TODAY.

McMahon was driving northbound on Route 15 when he collided with the rear of another vehicle and then crashed into a median wooden beam guardrail. A third vehicle that was driving southbound collided with ‘debris projected over the center median’ from McMahon’s vehicle, the report said.

No injuries were reported in the crash, and there were no passengers in any of the affected vehicles. All vehicle airbags were deployed in the crash.

Vince McMahon’s reckless driving case dismissed, attorney says

McMahon was issued a misdemeanor for reckless driving and following too closely, resulting in an accident. He was released on a $500 bond at the time.

In October 2025, a Connecticut Superior Court judge ruled that McMahon could resolve the charge if he entered a pretrial program, the Associated Press reported.

Mark Sherman, McMahon’s attorney, confirmed in a statement to USA TODAY that the court granted a motion to suspend and dismiss the case.

‘Vince’s primary concern during this case was for the other drivers and (he) is appreciative that the court saw this as more of an accident than a crime that needed to be prosecuted,’ the statement said.

Vince McMahon’s car accident occurred on same day as Hulk Hogan’s death

The former WWE boss helped build wrestling into a worldwide phenomenon when he took the reins of the business from his father, Vince McMahon Sr., in 1982, transforming its stars into larger-than-life characters and well-known celebrities.

McMahon was at the helm of the company for nearly four decades before he stepped down as CEO in 2022 amid reports he paid upward of $12 million to four women in a 16-year span to quiet allegations of sexual misconduct.

In 2024, he resigned as executive chairman and board member of TKO Group Holdings, the parent company of WWE, a day after a former employee accused him of sex trafficking and assault in a lawsuit. As of Feb. 26, the lawsuit is still pending.

Coincidentally, McMahon’s car accident occurred on the same day that WWE icon Hulk Hogan died at the age of 71. McMahon, in a statement, called Hogan the ‘greatest WWE superstar of all time.’

‘His grit and unbridled thirst for success were unparalleled – and made him the consummate performer,’ McMahon added.

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Denmark will head to the polls on March 24 after Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen called a snap parliamentary election, a move widely viewed as an attempt to consolidate rising public support tied to her handling of tensions with President Donald Trump over Greenland.

Frederiksen announced the early vote on Wednesday, arguing that Denmark needs political clarity at a time of mounting geopolitical pressure. According to Reuters, she said the country faces ‘a serious foreign policy situation,’ and that voters should have a say in how Denmark navigates it.

Her center-left Social Democratic government has seen a lift in opinion polls in recent weeks after taking a firm stance that Greenland is not for sale and that Danish sovereignty is non-negotiable. 

The dispute with Washington has reshaped the domestic political conversation, pushing Arctic security and national sovereignty to the forefront of Danish politics.

Frederiksen, who has led Denmark since mid-2019, has spent much of the past year managing the fallout from Trump’s renewed push to acquire Greenland, the vast Arctic island that is an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark. Tensions escalated sharply last month when Trump threatened to impose new tariffs on Denmark and several other European Union countries.

Trump has argued that the United States needs control of the North Atlantic island for national security reasons, citing increased activity by Russia and China in the Arctic. The region has grown in strategic importance as melting ice opens shipping routes and access to natural resources, intensifying competition among major powers.

The standoff appeared to ease after Trump announced that a framework agreement to strengthen Arctic security had been reached following talks with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos. After that announcement, U.S., Danish and Greenlandic officials began technical discussions on implementing the arrangement, focusing on security coordination rather than any change in sovereignty.

Throughout the crisis, Frederiksen and other senior Danish officials repeatedly emphasized that Greenland’s status is not up for negotiation. Speaking at the Munich Security Conference earlier in February, Frederiksen cautioned that she did not believe the crisis had fully passed and suggested Washington could still harbor ambitions to annex the island.

According to The Guardian, Danish commentators have described the prime minister’s polling boost as a ‘Greenland bounce,’ reflecting growing domestic approval of her firm posture toward Washington.

Frederiksen’s decision to call early elections appears aimed at converting that surge into a renewed mandate. Denmark’s next general election had not been scheduled until later this year, but the prime minister argued that the current security climate justifies seeking fresh voter backing.

Greenland, home to roughly 56,000 people, has long been strategically significant due to its location between North America and Europe. The United States maintains a military presence there at Pituffik Space Base, formerly known as Thule Air Base. Any suggestion of U.S. acquisition has historically been sensitive in both Copenhagen and Nuuk, Greenland’s capital.

Euronews reported that Frederiksen’s government has stressed cooperation with allies while firmly rejecting any negotiations over Greenland’s sovereignty. European leaders have signaled support for Denmark, reinforcing the view that Arctic stability is increasingly central to NATO and EU planning.

Opposition parties have criticized the timing of the snap election, arguing that Frederiksen is seeking political advantage during a moment of heightened nationalism. Others, however, have largely backed the government’s line on Greenland, suggesting that the sovereignty issue may transcend traditional party divides.

The March 24 vote will determine whether Frederiksen can strengthen her coalition or whether voters will shift the parliamentary balance. It will also serve as a broader test of how Danes believe their country should manage its relationship with Washington as Arctic security becomes a defining issue of global competition.

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Real Madrid has initiated proceedings to ban a fan who was caught on camera making a Nazi salute prior to Wednesday’s Champions League game against Benfica.

The club said the fan was caught by television cameras ahead of the Champions League playoff second leg at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, which Madrid won 2-1 to reach the round of 16.

According to Real Madrid, the fan was immediately expelled from the stadium.

‘Real Madrid C. F. announces that it has urgently requested the club’s Disciplinary Committee to initiate an immediate expulsion procedure for the member who was caught on television cameras performing the Nazi salute in the area where the Animation Stand is located, moments before the start of the match between Real Madrid and Benfica,’ a club statement read.

‘This member was identified by the club’s security staff moments after appearing on the broadcast and was immediately expelled from the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.

‘Real Madrid condemns this type of gesture and expression that incites violence and hatred in sports and society.’

Real Madrid fans unveiled a large “no to racism” banner prior to the game, a nod to the events of the previous week.

Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni was banned for the second leg after accusations that he directed a racial insult toward Real Madrid star Vinícius Jr during the first leg.

Prestianni has denied using a racial slur, saying that Vinícius ‘misinterpreted what he thought he heard.’

Vinícius would go on to score in both legs, with his 80th-minute goal on Wednesday giving Madrid breathing room as it advanced via a 3-1 scoreline.

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